Fortunate indeed
“Therefore, we who are alcoholics can consider ourselves fortunate indeed”
There was a fellow named Sam sitting on a bench at the beach in California. It turns out that Sam survived a plane crash five years earlier. When Sam breathes in, he fills his lungs with the salty air, taking the last pull to fill his lungs top and bottom. The smell of the ocean brings back the memories of a thousand summer days past. Sam pays close attention to the steady breeze as it blows through his hair. He is acutely aware of the gentle evening sun on his arm, cooled by a whispering crosswind. Ever since that plane crash five years earlier, Sam has become intensely aware of his life experiences and a desire to live in the present moment. If you were to go up to Sam and ask him if he was glad he was in a plane crash, he’s not going to tell you, “It was great. You should get into a plane crash.” Nevertheless, that plane crash changed his perspective. It changed the way Sam looks at life.
Addiction is just like that. Active addiction is going to change your perspective. And it’s going to change your perspective, whether you survive it or not. If you don’t survive active addiction, your perspective will become bleaker and bleaker, ending in incomprehensible demoralization and death. If you do survive active addiction and learn to live a sober life, your perspective will, in time, be rooted in gratitude as you become “happy, joyous, and free” and “happily and usefully whole”. And if you survive, there’s a good chance that your family will recover as well. Best of all, if you survive, you’ll have forged a path out that surely will be helpful to someone else.
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